Blair, I use mine on the road biking setting. I set the upper slider as high as it will go and then adjust the max volume on the stereo to be what I want it to be when we are at speed. Then for the lower levels I have it set to pretty much mute the music. Its kind of a both end of the extremes deal, but the Road Biking setting seems to be the best to wakeboard with.

Make sure your GPS location is on, Then I went to the road bike setting like flatetire said. Once Your moving and your looking at the profile screen make sure the slider under the speed is slid all the way up. Then turn your volume on your boat up to what you want while your moving, Then what I did is once you slow down to pick up a ride I used the volume button on the side you my phone to turn it down to the level I wanted while we where stopped. That set the low end for me and left the other arrow turned up for when your moving.

Three years later, any updates from anyone on this? I use an old HTC Rezound just for controling the tunes in my boat. I found a free app called Smart Volume Lite that I've been playing around with in my truck, adjusting the settings to simulate boarding and surfing. It doesn't appear to save any settings after closing and re-opening the app. There is also a 2-3 second lag from when I reach the said speed and the actual adjustment. Not big deals, other than that it appears this will work pretty good on the water....for free! But I'd certainly pay a few bucks for a better app that would resolve these issues....

I also have an iphone 5 with a similar free app called Audio Cruise and it appears to have the same issues although I haven't played with it much. I'd prefer to use my Rezound but if there's an iphone app that is siginificantly better then I could switch it up...

HSE was a volume controler. It tied into your tach and automaticaly lowered your volume when the engine went below a set rpm. Then went back up to a set volume when the set rpm was exceeded.
Some ppl said they were too expensive, I think those ppl never used one...lol
I love mine and it sucks HSE quit making them because I know a lot of folks still want them. Some ppl pull them off their old boats to put on the new boat.

Three years later, any updates from anyone on this? I use an old HTC Rezound just for controling the tunes in my boat. I found a free app called Smart Volume Lite that I've been playing around with in my truck, adjusting the settings to simulate boarding and surfing. It doesn't appear to save any settings after closing and re-opening the app. There is also a 2-3 second lag from when I reach the said speed and the actual adjustment. Not big deals, other than that it appears this will work pretty good on the water....for free! But I'd certainly pay a few bucks for a better app that would resolve these issues....

I tried a few android volume control apps and they all had problems. They were either missing features or would not run reliably. I decided to write my own. It's still a work in progress, but it seems to work. I've only tested it on my galaxy s3, but I think I set it up so it will work on devices running older versions of android. It's pretty basic. You enter a speed for volume control to start at, a speed for it to end at, a min volume and a max volume then hit start. The app pulls the speed from the gps and linearly adjusts the volume from the min to the max. You can save your settings, and it will automatically load them when you restart. I've been meaning to put it in the google play store, but haven't had the time to create the icons for it. For now it's up in my dropbox folder.https://www.dropbox.com/s/nxm5nrenclfw48r/GPSVolume.apk

I've been talking to the Ride My Wake developers. What they are testing with their upcoming update is a music player where you adjust your volume (using the iPhone volume buttons) to the level you want when at full speed. Then, when you switch on "Auto Volume" the volume will drop down to 25% anytime your speed is 4mph below your "target speed". Approach your target speed again, and the volume goes to 100%

Apparently, this fits within Apple's constraints with what they allow in the AppStore these days. They think boaters will enjoy a simpler approach (click and go), rather than having to fiddle with a whole bunch of configuration settings. I'm wondering if others agree?

I have used Ride My Wake! over bluetooth, aux, and Air Play. I've never tried it with USB, but would assume that works. It plays music within it's own built in app.

It doesn't have multiple volume settings for all different speeds. You have create profiles with target speeds and if you drop below 4mph under the target speed of your currently loaded profile, the volume decreases to a specified percentage of your volume setting.

I mainly use Ride My Wake! for the GPS speedometer; this is a great feature though.

I contacted Ride My Wake today and they responded that the app cannot change the volume of other apps (e.g., Spotify). It can only change the volume of music played within the app using it's built-in player, which only has access to your itunes library. Besides not being able to use Spotify, it looks like a great app for the volume adjustment and the GPS speed use.

They have been extremely responsive to my feedback. They want to start adding a social aspect to the app (song rankings and board rating), but said if it seems people want other music sources supported, like iTunes Radio and Spotify, the will work on that.

FYI, I have just recently been asked to join the Ride My Wake! team as a marketing consultant, so I won't be posting opinions here anymore due to conflict of interest. That said, the reduction is completely configurable in the latest version (between 0%-50% of the system volume setting).

The way Ride My Wake! works with media volume control (when you switch it on), is if you go 4mph below the target speed of your currently loaded profile (i.e. you can have a profile for surfing and boarding or each person), the volume will drop to your set percentage of the system volume (defaults to 10%).

So, if you load a wakesurfing profile, with a target speed of 10 MPH, it will play at full volume until you go below 6 MPH, then the volume will drop to 10% (or whatever you configure...can also make it mute it with 0%)

This was the most popular from our testing, so that's what made it into the app. Our testers did NOT like it when the volume decreased gradually as you slowed down -- they wanted it either full when riding or soft when slowed down/stopped.

Note: If you don't have a profile loaded, by default the volume goes to the quiet level at less than 6mph.

seriously MEDIA VOLUME CONTROL. hands down the best for boarding.... dont know how well it will work surfing if you go under 10MPH.

It's android only. And more than likely, it'll stay that way. Android is more open, meaning that they allow apps to control volume more liberally than iOS does. iOS likely doesn't allow apps to change system volume levels, whereas Android does. If Ride My Wake! wanted, they could probably make this a much more straightforward implementation on Android for that reason. So it's unlikely that you'll see a 1-to-1 port of that app to iOS.

That is true, Apple only lets the app set the volume to a percentage of the current system volume of the phone. This does seem to still work well for us since the user can set that percentage amount.

Ride My Wake! has the intention to port to Android, however the mission is the highest possible quality app, and so it is necessary to be a profitable company to maintain that. Since study after study has shown that Android users are not willing to pay for apps compared to iPhone users - and that iPhone development is much more profitable, that is where the focus has to be for now.